Grid-tied solar

   / Grid-tied solar #1,001  
Exactly. The batteries are not designed for everyday discharge/charge cycle. But as emergency supply they are OK. Generator is cheaper but it is noisy and requires fuel. So depending on circumstances the battery might be even cheaper to operate.
Yeah, I'm undecided on how to do emergency or standby power. Might go pto driven generator. Tractor engine is already here, well maintained and always ready, along with fuel. HS
 
   / Grid-tied solar #1,002  
We have grid tied solar and have a 20,000 kW Generac plumbed into our LP tank for emergencies. It does a self test every Monday afternoon. We never have to think about it.
 
   / Grid-tied solar #1,003  
Congratulations HS!

Looks just like ours - we put in 21 LG300 and SE system 6KW inverter on our garage in December - wasn't real happy with the first two months production with the 9' of snow from late Jan to early March but March we made 770KWH, April 850 and May 1042. The total in 5 months production 3240KWH and we consume 9000KWH annually so expect to hit 7500 or about 80% of our usage.

Our array is 211 Deg southeast at 38 degree declination. The only concern I had was in March when the sun angle for the panels was perfect the 6kW inverter was maxing out (clipping) for 3-4 hours a day so with 6KW inverter the max wattage is 6000 - whereas all the other SE inverters have a 10% or so overage capability. Now with the higher sun angle it barely hits 6K and on good days we generate over 40 KWH - so its only probably March and September/October we will see any clipping.

Overall we are happy with the choice - did you go for the 6KW or 7.6KW inverter?

Carl
 
   / Grid-tied solar #1,004  
Congratulations HS! Looks just like ours - we put in 21 LG300 and SE system 6KW inverter on our garage in December - wasn't real happy with the first two months production with the 9' of snow from late Jan to early March but March we made 770KWH, April 850 and May 1042. The total in 5 months production 3240KWH and we consume 9000KWH annually so expect to hit 7500 or about 80% of our usage. Our array is 211 Deg southeast at 38 degree declination. The only concern I had was in March when the sun angle for the panels was perfect the 6kW inverter was maxing out (clipping) for 3-4 hours a day so with 6KW inverter the max wattage is 6000 - whereas all the other SE inverters have a 10% or so overage capability. Now with the higher sun angle it barely hits 6K and on good days we generate over 40 KWH - so its only probably March and September/October we will see any clipping. Overall we are happy with the choice - did you go for the 6KW or 7.6KW inverter? Carl
We went with the 6kw inverter, because they are the most efficient operating up towards max, so you want to be there most of the time. Electrician finishes up tomorrow, I can hardly wait to see it work. Did you get monitoring system and how has that worked. HS
 
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   / Grid-tied solar #1,005  
We have grid tied solar and have a 20,000 kW Generac plumbed into our LP tank for emergencies. It does a self test every Monday afternoon. We never have to think about it.

Oops, that's 20 kW, not 20,000. :)
 
   / Grid-tied solar #1,006  
Yeah, I'm undecided on how to do emergency or standby power. Might go pto driven generator. Tractor engine is already here, well maintained and always ready, along with fuel. HS

That's one of the few attachments I'd not want for my tractor. I'd want stand-alone. The reason being, 99% of the time we have a power outage its due to storm damage or heavy snow. I need the tractor free for those tasks.
 
   / Grid-tied solar #1,007  
We went with the 6kw inverter, because they are the most efficient operating up towards max, so you want to be there most of the time. Electrician finishes up tomorrow, I can hardly wait to see it work. Did you get monitoring system and how has that worked. HS

The contractor should set up monitoring for you. Since you also have optimizers your system should be able to monitor each panel individually. The monitoring web site should have ability to issue a API key that can be used to port your data to other sites. My favorite is PVOutput based in Australia. It will give you additional insight about performance of your system and whole host of useful statistical functions. Your contractor should be able to configure it for you. Here is my system House in Medora 24.000kW | Live Output
 
   / Grid-tied solar #1,008  
Yeah, I'm undecided on how to do emergency or standby power. Might go pto driven generator. Tractor engine is already here, well maintained and always ready, along with fuel. HS

I agree with you.It is statistical problem taking into account timing, frequency and duration of outages. There is a timing difference between hurricane and ice storm I suppose. We can be out of power for a week every few years but it is always caused by ice storm in the winter. So having power for a fridge is not as imperative. We just shove our food in a cooler, put it on the porch and turn on two propane fireplace to keep the house warm. Cooking is done on a propane grill on the porch. I guess we should buy at least small portable geny to have internet and charged phones. Stationary geny would be nice and convenient but considering the frequency and timing of outages rather overkill.
 
   / Grid-tied solar #1,009  
HS,

Yes the Solar Edge web monitoring comes with it - it's pretty decent as you can drill into each panel detail- it updates every 15 minutes and they just released a new app for portable devices that gives a bit more information too.

The upside the monitoring is free, the downside you can't customize it (the installing contractor does it) and they would not give me access to configure things.
 
   / Grid-tied solar
  • Thread Starter
#1,010  
Congratulations HS!

Looks just like ours - we put in 21 LG300 and SE system 6KW inverter on our garage in December - wasn't real happy with the first two months production with the 9' of snow from late Jan to early March but March we made 770KWH, April 850 and May 1042. The total in 5 months production 3240KWH and we consume 9000KWH annually so expect to hit 7500 or about 80% of our usage.

Our array is 211 Deg southeast at 38 degree declination. The only concern I had was in March when the sun angle for the panels was perfect the 6kW inverter was maxing out (clipping) for 3-4 hours a day so with 6KW inverter the max wattage is 6000 - whereas all the other SE inverters have a 10% or so overage capability. Now with the higher sun angle it barely hits 6K and on good days we generate over 40 KWH - so its only probably March and September/October we will see any clipping.

Overall we are happy with the choice - did you go for the 6KW or 7.6KW inverter?

Carl

Sounds like your system is doing a good job. How close is your output running compared to the PVWatts model?

The 4 kW inverter for our 4.3 kW system clips on sunny January days around mid-day. Now is my low output season due to my panel mounting angle. Knock on wood, I haven't had even a hiccup from my system since it was installed. It just runs day in, day out. All I've done is dust the spider webs off the inverter. :D
 

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